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3. Comparing Our Taxes with Other Countries
As was discussed in the previous blog, between the federal, state and local governments, we pay a bewildering array of taxes. As a result, it is very difficult for us individually to calculate how much we owe in total taxes each year. It is much easier to calculate average taxes paid on a nationwide basis. This has averaged about 24% for the United States in recent years. Just how heavy is that burden? Most of us feel it is high–perhaps very high. But is it? What is high?
Average Tax Burdens Around the World
It is interesting to observe how heavily Americans are taxed compared with others. A very good measure of this can be found in the statistics of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) whose 35 members include most of the largest economies in the world together with a number of rapidly growing developing countries. The OECD statistics measure “Total Tax Revenue as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product.” The following numbers are the latest averages for which the national statistics were available–2012 for most countries, 2011 for a few.
a) Three major European countries, including France, pay an average tax of more than 45.0%!
- Denmark 48.0%
- Belgium 45.3%
- France 45.3%
Residents of Denmark therefore pay twice as much in taxes as a share of their national income as do Americans.
b) Five other European countries, including most of Scandinavia and Italy, pay 40.0%-45.0%:
- Italy 44.4%
- Sweden 44.3%
- Finland 44.1%
- Austria 43.2%
- Norway 42.2%
c) Another eight European countries, including Germany and the United Kingdom, pay a national average tax rate between 35.0%-40.0%:
- Hungary 38.9%
- Netherlands 38.6%
- Luxembourg 37.8%
- Germany 37.6%
- Slovenia 37.4%
- Iceland 37.2%
- Czech Republic 35.5%
- United Kingdom 35.2%
d) Eight countries from around the world, including Canada, Spain and New Zealand, pay between 30.0%-35.0% in total taxes. The overall OECD average of all member countries is 34.1%:
- OECD-Total 34.1%
- Greece 33.8%
- Spain 32.9%
- New Zealand 32.9%
- Estonia 32.5%
- Portugal 32.5%
- Poland 32.3%
- Israel 31.6%
- Canada 30.7%
e) Residents of countries as diverse as Japan, Switzerland, Turkey and Australia pay 25.0%-30.0%:
- Japan 28.6%
- Slovak Republic 28.5%
- Ireland 28.3%
- Switzerland 28.2%
- Turkey 27.7%
- Korea 26.8%
- Australia 26.5%
f) The residents of only three OECD countries pay less than 25.0% of GDP in total taxes. Two of those are developing countries in Latin America. Only the United States of all of the industrialized countries pays less than 25%!
- United States 24.3%
- Chile 20.8%
- Mexico 19.7%
Thus, although we Americans may feel that our tax burden is high, it is actually one of the lowest in the world! It is almost 10% lower than the average for all OECD countries (34.1% versus 24.3%).
Why Do We Need Federal Tax Reform?
If our total tax burden is actually among the lowest in the world, the reader might reasonably ask why I have I gone to so much effort to design a sweeping fundamental change of our tax system. The problem is not that our total taxation is too high. The problem is our array of municipal and federal tax systems–especially the Internal Revenue Code, which is:
- Very long (more than 77,000 pages) and very poorly designed;
- Very complicated and contradictory;
- Very unfair to most groups of taxpayers; and
- Perhaps most importantly, harmful to the American economy and society.
Ours is a bad federal tax system!
A Solution Is at Hand
Sensible Tax Reform–Simple, Just and Effective is a proposal to bring our tax system into the 21st Century. It will be:
- Simple,
- Consistent,
- Easy to understand,
- Easy to comply with,
- Just to businesses and individuals alike,
- A dynamic boost to the overall American economy and
- The vehicle for making American companies much more competitive on the world stage.
STR will:
- Create millions of jobs;
- Help diversify our economy;
- Greatly strengthen American companies;
- Substantially reduce our international balance of trade deficit; and
- Substantially reduce the American government’s need to borrow abroad.
Some observers, especially some misinformed politicians, constantly denounce our “high” taxes. They demand even more tax cuts. We do indeed need tax reform, but not because our taxes are too high. [As can be seen in the above data, Americans are among the lowest taxed citizens in the world.] Rather, it is that our Internal Revenue Code is simply a terrible mess.
I hate taxes. My wife and children all hate taxes as well. However, it is not the total of taxes that we detest but the senseless mess that is our Internal Revenue Code and the sense that the system is basically very unjust. It needs to be replaced. We need a much better tax system. We need Sensible Tax Reform–Simple, Just and Effective. We need it now!
People often say when they recognize a serious problem: “Someone should do something!” Well, each of us is someone. Each of us can make a contribution. Get involved. Join the tax revolution. It begins–here and now!
2. Do You Know How Much You Pay in Taxes?
Americans pay a bewildering array of taxes. We pay them at the local, the state and the federal levels. However, few taxpayers know how much they actually pay in taxes overall.
Types of Taxes That We Pay
State and local taxes are collectively called municipal taxes. The primary municipal taxes that apply to individuals include:
- Income taxes,
- Sales taxes,
- Excise taxes,
- Property taxes and
- Inheritance or estate taxes.
Any of them can be collected at either the state or local levels.
Our federal taxes are even more diverse–and complicated: The most important federal taxes are:
- Income taxes,
- Social Security taxes,
- Medicare taxes,
- Estate taxes,
- Excise taxes and
- Import duties.
We do not, however, pay a federal sales or other form of consumption tax. Sales taxes are only collected at the state or local level.
Difficulties of Calculating How Much We Pay Individually in Taxes
Most of our taxes (whether federal, state or local) are paid incrementally, rather than all at one time. That makes it much more difficult to calculate our total tax burden:
- Income taxes are collected from us every time that we receive our pay.
- The same is true of Social Security and Medicare taxes.
- Sales taxes are collected when we purchase taxable goods or services.
- Similarly, excise taxes are paid whenever we buy such goods as gasoline, alcohol or tobacco.
- We pay import duties every time that we purchase dutiable items, such as clothing and some foods.
- Property taxes are generally due only once or twice a year, but people who have mortgages commonly have property taxes collected monthly and then escrowed until the actual payments are due.
- Estate and inheritance taxes are triggered at the death of the owner of an estate–a taxation on wealth transfer. However, they are paid later, often much later, than the time of death.
Only when we prepare our annual federal tax returns are any of us likely to give much consideration to the total amount of taxes that we pay. However, making even a rough estimate is a monumental task. Few of us make the effort. Do you know how much you pay in taxes? Have you ever estimated the total?
Calculating Total Taxes Paid in the Entire Economy
While it is very difficult for us to calculate our own total personal tax burden, it is much easier for the federal government to calculate it on a national basis. Each taxing entity, whether Uncle Sam or state and local municipalities, tabulates and reports its own annual tax receipts. The federal government also calculates our gross domestic product (GDP) annually. Once the total of taxes collected by all taxing authorities throughout the country (T) is tabulated, it can be divided by the GDP of that year to yield the national average tax rate (NATR):
(T ÷ GDP) * 100 = NATR
As will be shown in the next post, the American NATR has been about 24% in recent years. That means that on the average we pay about one fourth of our total income in taxes–a sobering statistic. However, just how burdensome is that relative to other major countries in the world? That will be discussed in the next post.
www.SensibleTaxReform.org
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